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Last updated January 26.

Feb. 1 issue

Facts dispel church-state 'confusion'

By Adelle M. Banks Religion News Service

WASHINGTON — Legal experts from the left and right hope a new statement of shared principles on religious expression in public life will lead to fewer church-state lawsuits.

“There’s tremendous confusion about this area of the law,” said Melissa Rogers, whose Center for Religion and Public Affairs at Wake Forest University School of Divinity published the document after five years of work.

Rogers is a member of President Obama’s Advisory Council on Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships.

“We hear broad inaccurate statements all the time: on the one hand … that somehow religion has been kicked out of the public square; on the other hand … that there are no limits when government deals with religion.”

The 32-page document, unveiled Jan. 12 at the Brookings Institution, is an effort to “try to blow away those mischaracterizations,” said Rogers, who is finalizing recommendations for reform of the White House Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships.

The document covers such thorny legal matters as governmental displays and monuments that contain religious elements, public school lessons about religion, and religious symbols in retailers’ holiday ads.

While its drafters disagree on what some laws should say, the document summarizes current law as it is.

It answers such questions as:

  • May a city require individuals to obtain a permit prior to engaging in door-to-door advocacy on religious issues? (No)

  • May elected officials reference religious ideas and discuss their personal religious beliefs while in their official capacities? (Sometimes)

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